Most leaders don’t know how to communicate a message – and it shows
It still amazes me how many senior leaders, intelligent, experienced, highly educated professionals, simply don’t know how to communicate a message clearly and effectively. There are so many examples. You can see this so clearly when watching leaders deliver presentations.
They spend hours building PowerPoint decks, obsessing over font size and color schemes, but when they stand up to speak, they lose the plot. Their slides are packed, their timing is rushed, and their audience walks away confused, disengaged, or worse, unmoved. Indifferent.
PowerPoint has been the universal business language for decades. But the real problem isn’t the tool. It’s that too many leaders use it as a crutch instead of a medium for impact.
The epidemic of over-talking and under-communicating
I’ve watched countless executives try to cram ninety minutes of content into a thirty-minute meeting. They talk faster, flip slides faster, and seem to believe that if they can “get through it,” they’ve done their job.
They don’t pause to read the room. They don’t notice when people escape to their phones or check out completely. They miss the cues, glazed eyes, crossed arms, restless body language, all signaling one thing: “You lost me.”
Instead of adjusting, they double down. More words. More slides. More noise.
And when time runs out, they rush the ending or skip it altogether. Everyone leaves without clarity or conviction. That’s not communication. That’s self-indulgence.
The real problem: everything feels important
Most leaders fall into the same trap. They’re hypnotized by their own content. They think everything they want to say is equally important.
They confuse information with impact. They confuse talking with influencing.
They forget that communication is not about everything you know. It’s about what will make the biggest difference to your audience in this moment.
If you can’t tell the difference between what’s essential and what’s merely interesting, you will drown your message, and your credibility, in words.
The organizational consequences
Poor communication isn’t just a personal weakness; it’s an organizational liability.
When leaders don’t communicate clearly, the entire company suffers.
- Alignment breaks down.Teams leave meetings with different interpretations of what was said, and act on conflicting assumptions.
- Decisions slow down.Too much talk, too little clarity. Time is wasted rehashing topics that should have been settled the first time.
- Execution falters.People can’t execute what they don’t understand. When messages are vague, accountability erodes.
- Culture deteriorates.Employees lose faith in leadership, energy drops, and cynicism and resignation rise, because people feel trapped in endless talk with not enough real progress.
- Results decline.Projects miss deadlines, customers feel the inconsistency, and performance suffers.
The damage compounds over time. The organization becomes a place where communication is tolerated, not mastered, where everyone talks but few are truly heard and make a difference.
By contrast, when leaders communicate with precision and power, the effect is immediate and contagious:
- Clarity replaces confusion.People know what matters and act accordingly.
- Momentum builds.Meetings shorten, execution accelerates, and results improve.
- Culture strengthens.Resignation lifts, people feel connected to purpose and leadership again. And there is an organization consciousness and intent to make the greatest difference when communicating.
- Trust deepens.When communication is honest and effective, credibility rises, and so does performance.
Communication mastery doesn’t just make you a better speaker. It makes you a more powerful leader who makes a greater difference. And it makes your organization more coherent, confident, and unstoppable.
Communication is about altitude
Every message has an altitude. At 50,000 feet, you’re talking about purpose, vision, and direction. At 10,000 feet, you’re discussing strategy. On the ground, it’s execution and details.
Great communicators know how to adjust their altitude based on time and audience. If you have five minutes, you speak at 50,000 feet. If you have thirty or more, you descend.
But too many leaders try to cover everything, all altitudes, all details, all points, regardless of time. They treat a 15-minute update like a half-day workshop.
This results in information overload, zero retention, and wasted time.
Five ways to communicate like a leader
- Start with impact, not information.
Start from the end. Before you build a single slide, ask yourself: What difference do I want to make with this presentation?What do I want people to think, feel, or do differently as a result? Build your presentation from there. Everything else is noise. - Cut the “interesting.”
Most leaders overload their message with nice-to-know content. Ruthlessly remove anything that doesn’t serve your core purpose. Your audience doesn’t need to see how smart you are or how much you know. They need to see what matters. - Practice highlighting the essence, no matter your time.
Practice delivering your message in 30 minutes, 15 minutes, and 5 minutes. Learn to distinguish between essence and preference. When you master that, you’ll always hit the mark, no matter how much time you’re given. - Rehearse for clarity, not performance.
Stand in front of a mirror or a colleague with a stopwatch. Speak slowly, pause, and breathe. If you can’t deliver your message calmly and clearly in real time, your audience will feel your rush and disconnect. - Read the room.
During your presentation your audience is giving you feedback every second, with their eyes, posture, and silence. Pay attention. If you’ve lost them, stop. Re-engage. Ask questions. Great presenters don’t deliver speeches. They create conversations.
From content to connection
PowerPoint is a tool. Leadership communication is an art and learnable skill. The goal isn’t to transfer information. It’s to enroll others in purpose, commitment, and action.
The best communicators don’t need more slides. They need more awareness, more empathy, and more discipline to focus on what truly matters.
Your message doesn’t have to be long to be powerful. It has to be clear, human, and relevant. Because in the end, communication either accelerates performance, or undermines it.
Every presentation, meeting, and conversation is an opportunity to raise the standard, to speak with clarity, create alignment, and move people to act. So, communicate with intention, own your message, and make every word count.



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